The “10x Stronger” Epitalon Myth — Let’s Clear This Up

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Fordhayes

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There’s a claim floating around that the synthetic Epitalon sold as a research peptide is 10x more potent than what was used in the Russian studies, and therefore you should only dose 1mg instead of 10mg to replicate the research. This is misinformation, and it’s worth addressing directly.

What’s actually true: The early Russian studies used Epithalamin — a crude extract from bovine pineal glands containing a complex mixture of polypeptides. Khavinson’s team later isolated the specific four-amino-acid sequence (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) responsible for the effects and synthesized it as Epitalon. The synthetic version isn’t pharmacologically stronger — it’s just purer. You’re getting the active component without the filler. Khavinson himself went on to conduct studies using synthetic Epitalon directly, at the same 10mg dosage.

On dosing: I haven’t run a cycle yet, and I’m not claiming to have the definitive answer. I do have some on the way and I’m planning to do 5mg/day for 20 days rather than the 10mg/10-day Russian protocol, simply as a personal choice. If lower doses work for you, great. But that preference shouldn’t be dressed up as science by invoking a potency multiplier that doesn’t exist.

One more reality check: Vendors sell 50mg vial kits for around $120 for a reason. The price difference between a 10mg kit and a 50mg kit isn’t dramatic. If the 10x claim were true, nobody would be selling or buying the 50mg kits. The market itself contradicts the myth.

Do your own research, be honest about what you don’t know, and don’t spread misinformation to justify a dosing preference.
 
Fordhayes said:
There’s a claim floating around that the synthetic Epitalon sold as a research peptide is 10x more potent than what was used in the Russian studies, and therefore you should only dose 1mg instead of 10mg to replicate the research. This is misinformation, and it’s worth addressing directly.

What’s actually true: The early Russian studies used Epithalamin — a crude extract from bovine pineal glands containing a complex mixture of polypeptides. Khavinson’s team later isolated the specific four-amino-acid sequence (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) responsible for the effects and synthesized it as Epitalon. The synthetic version isn’t pharmacologically stronger — it’s just purer. You’re getting the active component without the filler. Khavinson himself went on to conduct studies using synthetic Epitalon directly, at the same 10mg dosage.

On dosing: I haven’t run a cycle yet, and I’m not claiming to have the definitive answer. I do have some on the way and I’m planning to do 5mg/day for 20 days rather than the 10mg/10-day Russian protocol, simply as a personal choice. If lower doses work for you, great. But that preference shouldn’t be dressed up as science by invoking a potency multiplier that doesn’t exist.

One more reality check: Vendors sell 50mg vial kits for around $120 for a reason. The price difference between a 10mg kit and a 50mg kit isn’t dramatic. If the 10x claim were true, nobody would be selling or buying the 50mg kits. The market itself contradicts the myth.

Do your own research, be honest about what you don’t know, and don’t spread misinformation to justify a dosing preference.

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Not clickbait. I’m just fed up. People read the 10x myth on Reddit and repeat it like it’s fact without ever checking the research. The research proves it’s wrong. If calling out misinformation gets attention, good. That was the point.
 
CNCCurrency said:
Study link
There’s no single magic link. This conclusion comes from reading multiple Khavinson studies, not a Reddit thread. I’ve done that research. If you’re going to challenge it, do the same. PubMed, Khavinson VKh, St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology. It’s all there. Go look.
 
Fordhayes said:
There’s no single magic link. This conclusion comes from reading multiple Khavinson studies, not a Reddit thread. I’ve done that research. If you’re going to challenge it, do the same. PubMed, Khavinson VKh, St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology. It’s all there. Go look.

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There is no reliable conversion ratio because Epithalamin (pineal extract) is

• Unknown and variable composition of extracts.

• Its biological effects may arise from several peptides acting together.

• Matrix effects in an extract (carrier peptides, salts, protease inhibitors) can alter absorption,

proteolysis, and tissue exposure compared with a purified synthetic peptide.

Practitioners and forum discussions note that Epithalamin (pineal extract) protocols often used

larger nominal doses than later Epitalon (synthetic tetrapeptide) protocols, and some users

report different subjective effects when switching to pure Epitalon. This has driven the

impression that the extract is “weaker” per mg. But mass-based comparisons are misleading.

Because extract doses are expressed as crude mass of extract (not quantified active

tetrapeptide), a larger extract dose may still contain less of the specific active tetrapeptide than

a small pure-peptide dose; apparent “weaker” effect can reflect dilution, different active

species, or different bioavailability rather than true lower intrinsic activity.

There is no validated, reliable mass-to-mass conversion between Epithalamin (pineal

extract) and Epitalon (synthetic tetrapeptide). Claims that the extract is simply “weaker” are

plausible but unproven without analytical and bioassay bridging; responsible translation requires

quantification of active components and exposure-based PK/PD mapping.
 
Makes sense to me. All molecules have different molarities, so it would be reasonable that a fragment would have a mass 10x smaller than the full protein strand.
 
I’m doing epi 5 mg and thymalin 5mg right now, doing 20 days. On day 18. 👩‍🔬 just going by feelzzz, I feelzzz like it’s fine. I’m probably more tired than I have been in years, enjoying sleep like I did when I didn’t have a job.
 
Fordhayes said:
Do your own research, be honest about what you don’t know, and don’t spread misinformation to justify a dosing preference.
Orrrrr….in your case, don’t be overconfident about what you think you know.

You could have written this much differently and not have come across arrogant/somewhat antagonistic, but since you’re just one random, unknown voice on the internet, your credibility is unknown and not worth the time to investigate or debate. However, there are very well-known researchers with established credibility in the peptide space who say otherwise.

I do agree everyone should do their own research and decide what makes logical sense to them.
 
CNCCurrency said:
There is no reliable conversion ratio because Epithalamin (pineal extract) is

• Unknown and variable composition of extracts.

• Its biological effects may arise from several peptides acting together.

• Matrix effects in an extract (carrier peptides, salts, protease inhibitors) can alter absorption,

proteolysis, and tissue exposure compared with a purified synthetic peptide.

Practitioners and forum discussions note that Epithalamin (pineal extract) protocols often used

larger nominal doses than later Epitalon (synthetic tetrapeptide) protocols, and some users

report different subjective effects when switching to pure Epitalon. This has driven the

impression that the extract is “weaker” per mg. But mass-based comparisons are misleading.

Because extract doses are expressed as crude mass of extract (not quantified active

tetrapeptide), a larger extract dose may still contain less of the specific active tetrapeptide than

a small pure-peptide dose; apparent “weaker” effect can reflect dilution, different active

species, or different bioavailability rather than true lower intrinsic activity.

There is no validated, reliable mass-to-mass conversion between Epithalamin (pineal

extract) and Epitalon (synthetic tetrapeptide). Claims that the extract is simply “weaker” are

plausible but unproven without analytical and bioassay bridging; responsible translation requires

quantification of active components and exposure-based PK/PD mapping.
Your opinion is logical, but not factual.

The original work used Epithalamin, and later studies transitioned to the synthetic tetrapeptide Epitalon at equivalent dosing.

Khavinson’s original research protocol used 10 mg intramuscularly for 10 days, repeated every 6 months. His team then synthesized the active sequence as Epitalon specifically to get a more standardized, reproducible compound with exact purity and consistency.

So he didn’t switch to synthetic Epitalon and then cut the dose by 90%. He kept the same dosing. That alone dismantles the 10x myth pretty cleanly. The guy who invented both compounds didn’t think the synthetic version required a fraction of the dose.
 
Fordhayes said:
The original work used Epithalamin, and later studies transitioned to the synthetic tetrapeptide Epitalon at equivalent dosing.

Khavinson’s original research protocol used 10 mg intramuscularly for 10 days, repeated every 6 months. His team then synthesized the active sequence as Epitalon specifically to get a more standardized, reproducible compound with exact purity and consistency.

He didn’t switch to synthetic Epitalon and then cut the dose by 90%. He kept the same dosing range. That alone dismantles the 10x myth pretty cleanly. The guy who invented both compounds didn’t think the synthetic version required a fraction of the dose.

Your opinion is logical but not factual.

The original work used Epithalamin, and later studies transitioned to the synthetic tetrapeptide Epitalon at equivalent dosing.

Khavinson’s original research protocol used 10 mg intramuscularly for 10 days, repeated every 6 months. His team then synthesized the active sequence as Epitalon specifically to get a more standardized, reproducible compound with exact purity and consistency.

So he didn’t switch to synthetic Epitalon and then cut the dose by 90%. He kept the same dosing. That alone dismantles the 10x myth pretty cleanly. The guy who invented both compounds didn’t think the synthetic version required a fraction of the dose.

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Dos-Dox said:
Orrrrr….in your case, don’t be overconfident about what you think you know.

You could have written this much differently and not have come across arrogant/somewhat antagonistic, but since you’re just one random, unknown voice on the internet, your credibility is unknown and not worth the time to investigate or debate. However, there are very well-known researchers with established credibility in the peptide space who say otherwise.

I do agree everyone should do their own research and decide what makes logical sense to them.
My tone was exactly as intended. You’re right I’m a random voice on the internet with zero credibility. But if my arrogance inspired even one person to actually research this instead of just repeating what they read on a forum, then it did its job.
 
I've read the Khavinson studies also. He did use Epitalon in several studies. Specifically, in a human clinical trial on patients with retinitis pigmentosa. He wanted to compare the efficacy of 10 mg of Epitalon vs. 10 mg of Epithalamin. The higher dose of Epitalon proved to be more efficacious.

He also did a head to head test comparing the two and these comparative trials established that 10 mg of the synthetic version provided a "therapeutic ceiling" for telomerase activation and chromatin decondensation.

So while he did compare them, this doesn't mean that synthetic Epitalon and Epithalamin are the same strength and he never indicated they were. Epitalon is still much stronger than Epithalamin, which is a soup of peptides, enzymes and amino acids, and 10x is not far off the mark. So both things can be true at the same time: Khavinson used Epitalon in a some of his research studies and Epitalon is still stronger than Epithalamin.

As far as efficacy goes, the Reta trials also used 12 mg. Do you need 12 mg for Reta to be effective? No, you don't. So why do you need 10.mg of Epitalon for it to be effective? Why not take the minimum effective dose?
 
Chili777 said:
I've read the Khavinson studies also. He did use Epitalon in several studies. Specifically, in a human clinical trial on patients with retinitis pigmentosa. He wanted to compare the efficacy of 10 mg of Epitalon vs. 10 mg of Epithalamin. The higher dose of Epitalon proved to be more efficacious.

He also did a head to head test comparing the two and these comparative trials established that 10 mg of the synthetic version provided a "therapeutic ceiling" for telomerase activation and chromatin decondensation.

So while he did compare them, this doesn't mean that synthetic Epitalon and Epithalamin are the same strength and he never indicated they were. Epitalon is still much stronger than Epithalamin, which is a soup of peptides, enzymes and amino acids, and 10x is not far off the mark. So both things can be true at the same time: Khavinson used Epitalon in a some of his research studies and Epitalon is still stronger than Epithalamin.

As far as efficacy goes, the Reta trials also used 12 mg. Do you need 12 mg for Reta to be effective? No, you don't. So why do you need 10.mg of Epitalon for it to be effective? Why not take the minimum effective dose?
Hey, you actually read the studies, that’s a plus. My argument was never that Epitalon and Epithalamin are 1:1 equivalents. Just that the “1mg max dose” crowd is nonsense. The man who created both compounds ran them at the same dosage range. That’s the point.

Your Retatrutide dosage comparison is valid, but it’s apples to oranges. The Epitalon research supports the 10mg dose. The “you can only take 1mg” narrative has no basis in any study Khavinson ever published.
 
Fordhayes said:
Hey, you actually read the studies, that’s a plus. My argument was never that Epitalon and Epithalamin are 1:1 equivalents. Just that the “1mg max dose” crowd is nonsense. The man who created both compounds ran them at the same dosage range. That’s the point.

Your Retatrutide dosage comparison is valid, but it’s apples to oranges. The Epitalon research supports the 10mg dose. The “you can only take 1mg” narrative has no basis in any study Khavinson ever published.
If they aren't equivalent, and Epitalon is 10x, then the 1 mg dosage is still valid and effective. That's the great thing about studies, they allow for different interpretations. I wouldn't say don't take 10 mg, just that you don't need to in order to enjoy the benefits. Good luck on your research with it.
 
Fordhayes said:
My tone was exactly as intended. You’re right I’m a random voice on the internet with zero credibility. But if my arrogance inspired even one person to actually research this instead of just repeating what they read on a forum, then it did its job.

Fordhayes said:
My tone was exactly as intended. You’re right I’m a random voice on the internet with zero credibility. But if my arrogance inspired even one person to actually research this instead of just repeating what they read on a forum, then it did its job.

Fordhayes said:
Hey, you actually read the studies, that’s a plus. My argument was never that Epitalon and Epithalamin are 1:1 equivalents. Just that the “1mg max dose” crowd is nonsense. The man who created both compounds ran them at the same dosage range. That’s the point.

Your Retatrutide dosage comparison is valid, but it’s apples to oranges. The Epitalon research supports the 10mg dose. The “you can only take 1mg” narrative has no basis in any study Khavinson ever published.

Fordhayes said:
Hey, you actually read the studies, that’s a plus. My argument was never that Epitalon and Epithalamin are 1:1 equivalents. Just that the “1mg max dose” crowd is nonsense. The man who created both compounds ran them at the same dosage range. That’s the point.

Your Retatrutide dosage comparison is valid, but it’s apples to oranges. The Epitalon research supports the 10mg dose. The “you can only take 1mg” narrative has no basis in any study Khavinson ever published.

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Chili777 said:
If they aren't equivalent, and Epitalon is 10x, then the 1 mg dosage is still valid and effective. That's the great thing about studies, they allow for different interpretations. I wouldn't say don't take 10 mg, just that you don't need to in order to enjoy the benefits. Good luck on your research with it.
The exact potency ratio between the two is unknown. What is known is that Khavinson, the man who created both used 10mg for each. That’s the only benchmark we have. Good luck with your research.
 
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